* European stock markets flat or lower in early trade
* MSCI Asia-Pacific index up 0.4%, Nikkei gains 0.4%
* U.S. jobs disappointing headline number but wages up
* risk sentiment improves
* Safe-haven government bonds steady after selloff
* Emerging-market stocks and FX index have best week since
* Second week of falls for gold
By Marc Jones
LONDON, Sept 6 (Reuters) - Stimulus from China capped a
strong week for global share markets on Friday, as mixed U.S.
jobs data kept bond buyers and dollar dealers on the back foot
after the first significant selloffs in those assets in months.
Following a rollercoaster week dominated by political drama
in Britain and Italy, trade war chatter, global monetary
stimulus and Argentina's imposition of capital controls, traders
had been enjoying a brief bout of calm.
Then, as China's markets were closing, the country's central
bank said it was slashing the amount of cash that commercial
banks must hold as reserves for the third time this year, in its
latest bid to shore up the slowing economy. That pepped up Europe's STOXX 600 index STOXX which had
started in the red after rising to its highest in more than
month on Thursday. .EU Wall Street also ESc1 opened its
session higher, though the gains weren't quite as strong as
futures markets had been signalling before the payrolls numbers.
They showed hiring slowed more than expected in August, with
retail recruitment declining for a seventh straight month. At
the same time however there were strong wage gains, which should
help support consumer spending and keep the economy expanding.
Nancy Curtin, Chief Investment Officer of Close Brothers
Asset Management, said: "The fundamentals of the U.S. economy
remain robust on the consumer side,"
But "the Fed has made it clear that they are keen to sustain
the expansion; hence any further weakness (in the economy) ...
could provide a clear signal for further easing."
Even before the jobs figures, European bonds had steadied
after their worst one-day selloff in more than a year GVD/EUR .
The euro EUR= was also standing firm at $1.1038 after the
worst week for the dollar in a month. /FRX
"It feels to me like the air is coming out of it a bit,"
Societe Generale (PA:SOGN) strategist Kit Juckes said, referring to the
recent surge in volatility.
The closely watched U.S. non-farm payrolls report showed a
130,000 increase in jobs last month compared to a Reuters poll
expecting a 158,000 rise. The economy also created 20,000 fewer
jobs in June and July than previously reported though the
overall unemployment rate was unchanged at 3.7%. Surveys on Thursday had suggested the U.S. economy may be in
better shape than investors have been fearing. Services activity
accelerated in August and private employers increased hiring
more than expected.
Despite the reassuring signs, bond markets still expect the
Federal Reserve to cut interest rates this month.
POUND REBOUND?
Overnight, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares
outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS added 0.6%, giving it a 2.4%
weekly gain, its best week since mid-June.
It was helped by news the United States and China had agreed
to hold high-level talks early in October, raising hopes their
long trade conflict might be resolved or least be toned down.
The Shanghai Composite Index .SSEC ended up 0.5% and Hong
Kong's Hang Seng .HSI rose 0.6%, even though rating agency
Fitch downgraded the latter city's credit rating after months of
unrest. Australian stocks .AXJO gained 0.5%, South Korea's KOSPI
.KS11 climbed 0.2% and Japan's Nikkei .N225 advanced 0.5%
too. Wall Street's main indexes inched up around 0.1% too after
the Dow .DJI added 1.4%, the S&P 500 .SPX climbed 1.3% and
Nasdaq .IXIC rose 1.75% the previous session.
"The strong U.S. data are the main part of the latest turn
in markets as they are key factors impacting equities and U.S.
yields, therefore determining how long this 'risk on' phase will
last," said Junichi Ishikawa, senior FX strategist at IG
Securities in Tokyo.
Despite its broader struggles, the dollar stood at 107.04
yen JPY= after climbing to a one-month high of 107.235
overnight.
The pound GBP=D3 eased to $1.23 from the near six-week
peak of $1.2353 it had reached after Britain's parliament moved
to block a UK departure from the European Union without a
transitional agreement. It had fallen to a three-year low of
$1.1959 midweek amid threats of a no-deal Brexit.
U.S. Treasuries kept moves tight after a busy last couple of
days which have seen prices fall and their yields rebound from
multi-year lows driven by bets on U.S. borrow cost cuts. US/
The 10-year Treasury yield US10YT=RR was 1.57%, up from a
three-year low of 1.428% in midweek, when soft economic data and
Sino-U.S. trade worries stoked global recession concerns.
"The recent panic in markets was excessive. And if a
sustained reversal of fragile sentiment gets under way, U.S.
equities will test fresh record highs and a corresponding drop
in bond prices will present a good bargain-hunting opportunity,"
said Eiichiro Tani, chief strategist at Daiwa Securities.
In commodities markets, Brent oil futures LCOc1 sank 1.5%
to $60 per barrel. Brent had climbed to a one-month peak of
$62.40 per barrel on Thursday after data showed U.S. crude
stockpiles decline and the news about U.S.-China trade talks.
The flip side was a small rise in gold prices on the day
although it was on track for a 1% weekly drop.
"The good economic news from the U.S. and the news of the
restart of trade negotiations drove risk-on sentiment and in
turn drove down demand for gold and other safe-haven assets,"
said SP Angel analyst Sergey Raevskiy.